Day 190 - 23 Nov 95 - Page 02
1 Thursday, 23rd November, 1995
2
3 MR. RAMPTON: My Lord, I do not know whether Ms. Lamb is here.
4 If she is, I fear that there are very grave problems about
5 her giving evidence in accordance with the scheme suggested
6 by Mr. Morris in the letter which he sent to us yesterday,
7 which I hope your Lordship has a copy of.
8
9 MR. JUSTICE BELL: Yes.
10
11 MR. RAMPTON: What I do not know is whether your Lordship has
12 also a copy of the transcript of the interview with the
13 Assistant Manager at Kentish Town called Lynval (?).
14
15 MR. JUSTICE BELL: Yes, I have that.
16
17 MR. RAMPTON: We do not have that, and I only saw it yesterday.
18 My Lord, the problems are related, though in some sense
19 separate. The first problem relates to Mr. Morris' wish to
20 have the statement of Lynval and the statement of the
21 second Assistant Manager at Holborn (I think his name is
22 Ryan) form part of the evidence. The reason I say that is
23 that, in our submission, they are not admissible. Absent
24 of a proper Civil Evidence Act notice, they could only ever
25 be admissible as admissions, which are receivable, or would
26 be if they were, against the Plaintiffs in this case.
27
28 My Lord, there is a lot of authority on that. I have now
29 done the research, with the help of Mr. Atkinson. On the
30 basis of that authority, we will submit that statements of
31 that kind are plainly inadmissible if they are out of court
32 statements, which these are. That is the first problem.
33
34 The second problem is that the attendance note some time in
35 1987 of the meeting attended by Ms. Lamb and Mr. Alimi and
36 Mr. Percy at the offices of Lovell White & King (as I think
37 they were in those days) is, even in the edited version
38 proposed by Mr. Morris, full of what on its face is quite
39 clearly hearsay as well.
40
41 The only exception that I make in this regard is the notes
42 of the interview with Ms. Blackett, a senior personnel
43 field officer at McDonald's Headquarters, because there
44 I would be likely to concede that she would have had the
45 requisite authority to speak to a member of the press.
46
47 I do not know how your Lordship would wish to deal with
48 it. If Ms. Lamb is here, it would be both tedious and
49 inconvenient for her to sit here while I make a submission
50 that could well last most of the morning. The alternative
51 would be for her to give such parts of her evidence as I do
52 not object to, that is to say, leaving me to make my
53 objection later without the evidence having been heard, for
54 her to verify fact that she had those interviews, and then,
55 if your Lordship were against my submission, the notes of
56 those interviews, transcript in one case, could then be
57 read at a later date. She does not need to be here for
58 that, if she has authenticated or verified the fact that
59 those are the notes she took.
60